Sports
Igims, Long named PSAC Scholar Athletes of the Year
LOCK HAVEN, Pa. – Slippery Rock University swept the 2024-25 Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference Pete Nevins Scholar Athlete of the Year awards with graduates Anna Igims and Brayden Long earning the conference’s top student-athlete honors in an announcement from the league office Wednesday.
Igims, a distance runner on the SRU women’s cross country and track & field teams, was named the PSAC Female Scholar Athlete of the Year, while Long, a quarterback on The Rock football team, was named the PSAC Male Scholar Athlete of the Year for the second straight year.
The Pete Nevins Scholar Athlete of the Year awards are nominated for and voted on by the athletic communication professionals at each of the 17 institutions in the PSAC. Each school can nominate only one male and one female for the award. Nominees must have been named to PSAC Top 10 honors in the fall, winter or spring, must have at least a 3.50 cumulative grade point average, must be at least sophomores in academic and athletic standing and must have significant athletic credentials. The award is named after the late Pete Nevins, who served as sports information director at East Stroudsburg for more than 30 years.
Igims was named to the PSAC Top 10 in all three seasons this year, completing her career as a five-time PSAC Top 10 honoree. Long picked up Fall Top 10 honors for the second straight year.
This marks just the third time in the 35-year history of the Nevins Award that one institution swept both the male and female honors and it marks the second time that Slippery Rock has accomplished that feat. The Rock won both awards in 2016-17 with track & field standouts Sabrina Anderson and David Reinhardt. Shippensburg is the only other school in the league to sweep both awards in the same year with Cindy Kepler and Steve Economopoulos winning the awards in 1993-94.
Long becomes just the seventh overall student-athlete and the second male student-athlete in PSAC history to repeat as the Scholar-Athlete of the Year. The only other male athlete to earn back-to-back Nevins Awards was California (Pa.) baseball player Mike Larson in 2004 and 2005. Long also becomes the second Slippery Rock student-athlete on the list of two-time winners, joining Anderson, who was honored in 2016 and 2017.
Igims and Long become the 14th and 15th Slippery Rock winners of the PSAC Scholar Athlete of the Year award (full list available below). A look at their exceptional accomplishments can be found below.
ANNA IGIMS – Graduate Student – Pittsburgh, Pa. – XC/Track & Field
Academics: Igims graduated in 2024 with a 3.98 GPA and a degree in school wellness education with a minor in public health. She completed a full year of graduate work in 2024-25 with a perfect 4.0 GPA in the applied behavioral analysis program. A 2024 Academic All-America honoree, Igims is a three-time Academic All-District honoree, a six-time USTFCCA All-Academic selection, a five-time PSAC Scholar-Athlete and a five-time D2ADA Academic Achievement honoree. She was also the lone female student-athlete in the PSAC to earn the Division II 50th Anniversary Scholarship in 2024. She was named to the PSAC Top 10 in the fall, winter and spring in 2024-25 and finished her career with five selections to the PSAC Top 10, the third-most in PSAC history. Igims is currently on the ballot for the 2024-25 Academic All-America team and is a candidate for multiple NCAA major awards, including the postgraduate scholarship, the NCAA Woman of the Year award and the NCAA Impact award.
Athletics: Igims was unbeatable in the PSAC in 2024-25. She won seven PSAC individual titles and led Slippery Rock to team titles in cross country, indoor and outdoor track & field. She opened the year by winning the PSAC and Atlantic Region titles in cross country, becoming the first SRU female distance runner to ever accomplish that feat. She followed that up by earning All-America honors at the National Championships in the fall, becoming the first SRU female cross country All-American since 2010. She was named the PSAC and Atlantic Region Athlete of the Year in the fall. Igims then won three PSAC titles at the indoor conference meet, taking the crown in the distance medley relay, the mile and the 3,000-meter run. She earned All-Region honors with the fastest time in the region in four different events and placed 17th in the 5,000-meter run at the National Championships before being named the PSAC and Atlantic Region Track Athlete of the Year. Igims closed her year with a stellar spring, winning PSAC titles in the 1,500-meter run, 5,000-meter run and the 3,000-meter steeplechase on the way to being named the Most Outstanding Track Athlete and the Overall MVP at the PSAC Championships. She broke the SRU record in the steeplechase twice during the year (10:17) and earned first team All-America honors with a seventh place finish at the National Championships. She was named the PSAC Track Athlete of the Year to complete a year-long sweep with three PSAC Athlete of the Year awards. Igims departs Slippery Rock with school records in the indoor mile (4:55), outdoor 5K (16:38) and steeplechase (10:17). She is a three-time All-American, a 14-time PSAC champion, a six-time PSAC Athlete of the Year, a three-time Atlantic Region Athlete of the Year, a 21-time All-PSAC honoree and a 21-time All-Region selection.
BRAYDEN LONG – Graduate Student – Hanover, Pa. – Football
Academics: Long was the most decorated Division II football student-athlete in the country in terms of academic and athletic honors in 2024-25. He was named the 2024 Academic All-American of the Year for Division II and was the first team quarterback on the Academic All-America team after graduating with a degree in sport management with a perfect 4.0 GPA. Long was also the only Division II finalist for the 2024 William V. Campbell Trophy, known as the “Academic Heisman,” and was the only Division II member of the National Scholar-Athlete Class presented by the National Football Foundation. He was recognized on stage with some of the biggest names in football at the National Football Foundation Awards Dinner and College Hall of Fame Induction ceremony in Las Vegas. Long was also recognized alongside Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter at the Maxwell Awards Gala at the College Hall of Fame in Atlanta. He was also the 2023-24 PSAC Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year, the D2 Conference Commissioner’s Association Atlantic Region Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year and the lone PSAC male athlete to earn the NCAA Division II 50th Anniversary Scholarship.
Athletics: On the field last fall, Long quarterbacked The Rock football team to the national semifinals and a No. 3 final ranking after throwing for 3,470 yards to rank third among all players in Division II. He also ranked ninth in the nation in passing touchdowns with 28 and was 10th in the nation in points responsible for with 208 after rushing for six TD to account for 34 total touchdowns. He completed 65.1 percent of his passes for 3,470 yards with just eight interceptions on 450 attempts. He became the only QB in SRU history to top 3,000 yards in two separate seasons and leaves the program ranked No. 1 all-time in completions (631) and completion percentage (67%) and No. 2 all-time in passing yards (7,527) and passing TD (64), despite starting only two seasons. Long was named to All-PSAC, All-Region and All-America honors for the second straight year and was one of the eight national finalists for the Harlon Hill Trophy as the Division II Player of the Year for the second straight year. He finished in the top six in the national voting for the Harlon Hill Trophy in both 2023 and 2024 and was named the SRU Male Athlete of the Year in both 2023-24 and 2024-25. Long earned Academic All-America honors in both 2023 and 2024 and was both the PSAC and Super Region One Offensive Athlete of the Year in 2023-24.
ANNUAL SWEEPS OF NEVINS AWARD (3)
1993-94: Shippensburg (Cindy Kepler, Steve Economopoulos)
2016-17: Slippery Rock (Sabrina Anderson, David Reinhardt)
2024-25: Slippery Rock (Anna Igims, Brayden Long)
TWO-TIME NEVINS AWARD WINNERS (7)
Brayden Long, Slippery Rock, Football (2023-24, 2024-25)
Sabrina Anderson, Slippery Rock, Track & Field (2015-16, 2016-17)
Neely Spence, Shippensburg, Track & Field/XC (2010-11, 2011-12)
Mike Larson, California, Baseball (2003-04, 2004-05)
Laura Hall, Indiana, Volleyball (2001-02, 2002-03)
Molly Carr, Indiana, Basketball/Softball (1997-98, 1998-99)
Kara Hopkins, Edinboro, Volleyball/Swimming (1990-91, 1991-92)
SLIPPERY ROCK’S ALL-TIME NEVINS AWARD WINNERS
2024-25: Brayden Long, Football
2024-25: Anna Igims, Women’s XC/Track & Field
2023-24: Brayden Long, Football
2021-22: Connor Hamilton, Baseball
2017-18: Marcus Martin, Football
2016-17: Sabrina Anderson, Women’s Track & Field
2016-17: David Reinhardt, Men’s Track & Field
2015-16: Sabrina Anderson, Women’s Track & Field
2008-09: Jen Blasko, Women’s Volleyball
2007-08: Jen Hansen, Women’s Track & Field
2003-04: Karyn McCready, Women’s Track & Field
1999-00: Tim Kusniez, Football
1997-98: Dave Sabolcik, Football
1995-96: Lori Robinson, Women’s Basketball
1994-95: Mark Metzka, Men’s Basketball
To stay up to date with all that happens at The Rock, follow our official Athletic Communication accounts on ‘X’ (formerly Twitter, @Rock_Athletics), Facebook (RockAthletics) and Instagram (RockAthletics).
Sports
Kentucky set to host volleyball regional
LEXINGTON, Ky. — The University of Kentucky is hosting the 2025 NCAA Volleyball Lexington Regional. Matches will be played Thursday and Saturday at Memorial Coliseum.
Top-seeded Kentucky opens play Thursday afternoon at 3:30 p.m. ET against Cal Poly, who beat the No. 4 seed USC in five sets Friday to advance. In the regional’s opening match, second-seeded Arizona State will play third-seeded Creighton at 1 p.m. ET. ESPN2 will have live coverage of the matches Thursday, with both also shown live on the ESPN app. The two winners of Thursday’s matches will meet Saturday afternoon in the regional final, with the winner advancing to the NCAA Final Four the following weekend in Kansas City, Missouri. The Lexington Regional final on Saturday will be aired live on the ESPN networks, with a time to be announced Thursday.
All-session tickets for the 2025 Lexington Regional go on sale Monday at 10 a.m. ET through UK Athletics by calling the ticket office at 859-257-3838 or visiting the ticket office in the Joe Craft Center. Fans interested in purchasing single-session tickets can acquire those tickets beginning at 10 a.m. ET Tuesday. One ticket will get fans into both regional semifinal matches Thursday.
2025 NCAA Volleyball Lexington Regional Memorial Coliseum — Lexington, Ky.
Thursday, Dec. 11
- Match 1: 1 p.m. ET — (2) Arizona State vs. (3) Creighton [ESPN2]
- Match 2: 3:30 p.m. ET — (1) Kentucky vs. Cal Poly [ESPN2]
Saturday, Dec. 13
- Match 3: Time TBA — Winner Match 1 vs. Winner Match 2 [TV TBA] — Winner advances to NCAA Final Four
Sports
El Paso volleyball player Giselle Gandara named MaxPreps All-American
Dec. 7, 2025, 9:15 a.m. MT
Eastlake High School volleyball player Giselle Gandara has been named to the MaxPreps Freshman All-American volleyball team.
The 5-9 outside hitter had 427 kills, 378 digs, 66 blocks and 53 aces for the Falcons, who finished 36-5 and won two playoff matches this past season. She is one of five Texas players on the 20-person team.
“Giselle is a fantastic player,” Eastlake coach Roel DeAnda said. “She has a strong work ethic and her future is bright. It’ll be great to see her compete in the next three years.”

Gandara’s sister, Genna, is the setter for Eastlake and is a junior.
“To see Giselle’s growth as player has been amazing,” Genna said. “She’s hard working and plays with confidence,”
Added Giselle: “It was a blessing for the great season we had as a team. Playing alongside my sister Genna helped me so much, I learned a great deal from here. I wanted to make an impact as a freshman. I wanted to prove people wrong this year and that I could play at a high level. We had an amazing team and beating Keller in the playoffs was a special moment.”
Felix F. Chavez can be reached at fchavez@elpasotimes.com; @Fchavezeptimes on X
Sports
Bump, set, spike: Dinos teach students of all skill levels volleyball during unique one day camp
For the average junior high student, volleyball can be a counterintuitive and hard-to-learn sport. By partnering with the Calgary Dinos Men’s Volleyball team, Andy Brar, a Teacher at Dr. Gordon Higgins School, hopes to break as many of those barriers as he can.
For a one day camp, players and coaches from the Calgary Dinos Men’s volleyball team visited the Dr. Gordon Higgins junior high school for a three-hour, two section volleyball camp, at no cost to the school or the students.
“It’s the culmination of two individuals coming together and really highlighting the beauty of their two institutions, for example, the University of Calgary and their esteemed athletic program and the beautiful diversity that exists in a northeast school like this,” Brar told LWC.
With attendance set through an open sign up, Brar said he encouraged students who are unfamiliar with volleyball to attend, as volleyball, though the root of the event, was only a piece of the camp.
“The hope for this camp would be to take these skills and apply them to their everyday life, but also to understand the next time I’m faced with the challenge or I haven’t done something before to step up and jump on opportunities,” he said.
Life skills aside, Brar valued a camp of this caliber, having university level athletes and a former Olympian as instructors at over $20,000 per student. The camp offered a unique opportunity to learn from the best, especially for the students who may have less experience with the sport.
“If you give students confidence months in advance of tryouts, you’re exposing them to a new sport. When that individual who’s giving the instruction is a two-time Olympian, it really highlights the importance of the sport and the underlying commitments of teamwork, communication and building togetherness,” Brar said.
The Olympian in question, second-year Dinos’ head coach Graham Vigrass, said the opportunity was equally valuable for the Dinos team, especially at this point in the season.
“I was excited to see how much fun our guys are having. It’s a time of the year that they’re a bit burnt out from all the practices and matches that we have and this is a bit of a refresh and gets back to their love of the game,” said Vigrass, who represented Canada at the Olympics in 2016 and 2020.
“They see kids that are pumped and excited to see them and get their autographs, I hope that it makes them understand why they fell in love with the game when they were this age, because it’s kind of easy to forget it.”
Brar, who recently was honoured with the 2025 Prime Minister’s Award for Teaching Excellence, hopes the camps can become a somewhat regular thing for his students, a feeling reciprocated by Vigrass.
“This is the first time we’ve done (a camp like this). I’m a newer coach at U of C, but this is a huge priority of mine, is to get out to community and ideally, to communities like this that don’t necessarily have that same opportunity as some others in Calgary,” he said.
Sports
UW-Oshkosh volleyball celebrates first national championship | WFRV Local 5
(WFRV) – The UW-Oshkosh women’s volleyball team returned to campus as national champions for the first time in program history, welcomed home by a crowd of celebrating fans.
The Titans capped a dominant postseason run with a 3–0 sweep of No. 5 La Verne in the NCAA Division III title match — completing the tournament without dropping a single set on their way to the crown.
For reaction from the team, click the video above for the full story.
Sports
Is AI taking jobs from college graduates? Here’s what to know
As artificial intelligence continues to make appearances in almost all aspects of our lives, there have been rising concerns for whether it’s taking jobs, especially those of new college graduates entering the labor market.
Colorado State University student Eleanora Proffitt said AI has caused her to worry for the future in an already tight labor market.
“We’re already in a job shortage,” Proffitt said. “AI should be helping us, … not taking our jobs away.”
The unemployment rate of newly graduated college students reached its highest percentage since July 2021 — 5.8% — in April, according to a report by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. This number, compared to an unemployment rate of 4% for all workers that same month, has raised some alarms regarding AI’s impact.
Oxford Economics, a global economic advisory firm, stated in a recent report that “there are signs that entry-level positions are being displaced by artificial intelligence at higher rates.”
Various job sectors have been affected by AI differently. A working paper published by Stanford Digital Economy Lab found that between late 2022 and July 2025, areas of employment for young workers in software engineering, which SDEL referred to as an “AI-exposed occupation,” has declined by nearly 20%.
Other fields such as customer service, accounting and auditing, secretarial and administrative work, computer programming and sales revealed a similar pattern, according to the paper.
According to CNBC, Some major firms and companies such as JPMorgan Chase, Amazon and Walmart are starting to make the switch to AI for lower-level white-collar jobs because of its cheaper price and supposed efficiency. However, there are still many findings that claim AI is not a major component regarding recent unemployment rates for all recent college graduates.
“Will (AI) take jobs? Yes,” said Martin Shields, a Colorado State University professor of economics. “Will it take all the jobs? Certainly not. And will it create a lot of opportunities? Yes, it will.”
According to an article by The Budget Lab at Yale, the broader labor market has not been hugely disrupted since the release of ChatGPT — a popular AI chatbot developed by OpenAI. The lab notes that an impact on the labor market is likely to take much longer than just 33 months and can take decades to fully settle in.
A current trend in the labor market is that fewer people are quitting their jobs, and fewer employers are hiring because of economic uncertainty. This is known as a labor market tightening, which poses an even greater challenge for fresh college graduates trying to get their foot in the door.
Adjustments to technological progress has been done throughout history and are expected to a certain degree, but some are concerned that job losses may look a little different now, as AI is replacing jobs that were generally thought of as “safe.” Despite the current state of the job market, the Future of Jobs Report 2025 by World Economic Forum estimated that although AI could displace 92 million jobs by 2030, it could add 170 million new ones.
These positions could be in areas of AI development, research and safety, as well as robotics.
“People who can use the technology, lead the use of this technology, communicate it, can check it, can ask it the right questions — those people will thrive with that skill set,” Shields said.
A report by Lightcast, a labor insight platform, found that in an analysis of over 1.3 billion job postings, there has been a surge in demand for AI skills — and higher average pay for jobs that required them.
CSU alumnus and Chief Operating Officer for ZenRows, a web data company, Robert Mata said he has been in tech for 15 years and pays close attention to AI usage when hiring. Mata is not just interested in whether new hires use AI, but more so how they use the tool in the context of the role they are applying for.
“It goes way beyond, ‘Hey, do you use AI daily for X, Y, Z?’” Mata said. “It really depends on the role and the usage of AI.”
Mata said he has had to assess how potential candidates for various positions utilize AI. For example, he asks applicants for sales positions how they use AI to better find leads, source data, acquire contact information and more.
Taking on the potential growth and challenges brought by AI, CSU has begun integrating AI literacy into higher education. The webpage titled AI @ CSU has news related to AI, resources for learning how to use AI and pages describing the institution’s mission and vision with AI.
CSU also offers a range of classes available to students who wish to expand their skills in AI, with more to come. As the job market adjusts to new technology, experts suggested that no matter what field students dream of working in, learning how to better navigate AI and use it as a tool are what experts and the job market are alluding to as crucial in this job climate.
“Let’s use this tool,” Shields said. “Let’s recognize its limitations. Let’s recognize that there are a lot of things that we can do that it can’t and hone in on those skills.”
Reach Katya Arzubi at news@collegian.com or on social media @RMCollegian.
Sports
Kenlee Barnard leads Courier & Press 2025 All-Metro volleyball team
Dec. 8, 2025, 3:02 a.m. CT
EVANSVILLE — Ashley Kaczmarski remembers when everything clicked into place this season.
Her North High School volleyball team was on the road at Heritage Hills. The Huskies lost the second set to the eventual sectional champions. Kaczmarski sensed her group was off that evening — none moreso than star setter Kenlee Barnard.
The coach pulled her senior captain aside during the break with a message: the team needed her. What transpired that night, and by extension the rest of the season, summed up what many in the program already knew. Barnard was going to lead the way.
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